

Book of Time is one of those Hacksaw Gaming titles that looks like it was made during a fever dream — and maybe that’s part of the charm. It doesn’t follow the formula most “book” slots stick to. Instead, it throws in cartoon horror, talking frogs, and oddly satisfying old-school mechanics under a modern skin. You don’t quite know what it is until you’ve spun it a few dozen times.
This slot definitely doesn’t come from a big studio trying to imitate Egyptian gods or Norse myths. Hacksaw leans into weird — always has. Here, the main character is a frog in a top hat with glowing eyes. The entire setup looks like a strange mix of 1930s cartoons and silent film horror. If that sounds like too much, fair. But it works somehow.
The reels are 5×4, and paylines? A modest 20. But the layout isn’t really what keeps you playing — it’s the atmosphere. You get the sense that something’s slightly off in every spin, and it keeps the tension weirdly high.
Yes, there’s a book. And yes, it’s a scatter and a wild. But there’s more going on. Two bonus rounds, each with a different feel:
Book of Time Free Spins: standard expanding symbols, just like the classic “Book of” formula.
Clock Bonus: land 3 clocks and you enter a bonus game with sticky multipliers — much more volatile, and arguably more fun.
The base game itself can surprise. Random expanding symbols can trigger even outside free spins, and when they do, it feels good. There’s a tension here — not constant, but it builds.
Category | Detail |
---|---|
Reels/Rows | 5×4 |
Paylines | 20 |
RTP | 96.1% |
Volatility | High |
Max Win | 10,000x |
Mobile Ready | Yes |
The soundtrack feels like something pulled out of a haunted puppet show. Ticking, creaking, and a looping melody that teeters on unsettling — it’s not “epic” or cinematic, just… strange. But in a slot like this, that’s a plus. Most games sound the same. This one doesn’t. Bonus: the reel sounds don’t feel copy-pasted, which happens a lot in mid-tier releases.
There’s an odd sense of being observed in this game. Between the eyes in the background and the frog’s occasional movement, you sometimes forget it’s a slot. It toes the line between parody and paranoia — and that keeps it engaging. For players tired of neon fruits or endless dragons, this game’s commitment to absurdity is refreshing.
Fans of “Book of” slots who want a fresh spin
Players into creepy-cute visuals and experimental design
High volatility chasers who don’t mind long dry spells
If you need your slots serious or lore-heavy, this probably isn’t your game. But if you’re fine with chaos wrapped in old-school math — Book of Time delivers in its own bizarre way.